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Health Care Innovation in India


Strategy and Business

[M]ore than 490 million people (about 70 percent of the Indian population) live in rural and semi-urban areas. They are difficult to reach, especially in a country where doctors are scarce (the ratio of physicians to total population is less than one per 100,000 people, compared with about one per 160 in the United States). World-class facilities are even scarcer. Rural patients must often travel to cities for treatment, a journey of excessive cost since their family members travel with them. These constraints affect the nature of health care in unexpected ways. For example, in the United States, a customized lower-limb prosthetic may require several fittings spread over weeks. In India, it must be finished in one eight-hour sitting, so the patient and his or her family can return home before their money runs out.

And yet amid all these constraints, a few health-care providers in India are establishing new global standards for cost, quality, and delivery. They do it by bypassing the conventional approaches to medical practice. For example, the Narayana Hrudayalaya cardiac care center, located in Bangalore, is one of the world’s largest providers of heart surgery and other forms of cardiac care, including care for children. A private corporation, it was founded in 2001. Only three years later, in 2004, the company performed 7,500 cardiac surgeries and treated 60,000 outpatients, including almost 2,000 telemedicine patients who received consultation and treatment at remote sites, accessing specialists through satellite- and Internet-based telecommunications links. NH makes no distinction among the quality of service delivered to different patients. Everyone is charged a fixed rate per surgery of $1,500 — one-thirtieth the $45,000 that a typical U.S. hospital might charge, and one-third of the $4,500 that a top-line hospital in India would charge.

It’s important to note that the facility and its parent company, Narayana Hrudayalaya (NH), are profitable. And NH’s cardiac care is far from the only profitable health-care innovation emerging from India. The most famous example (documented at length in my book The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid) is the “Jaipur Foot,” a prosthetic foot made from rubber, intended for below-the-knee amputees, such as people injured by accidents and land mines. The JF (as it is universally called) costs about $30, a fraction of the $8,000 to $10,000 cost of a similar Western prosthesis; if a patient damages, loses, or outgrows it, he or she can simply get a new one. Since 1975, the JF has been distributed by a nonprofit, nondenominational organization called the Bhagwan Mahaveer Viklang Sahayata Samiti (BMVSS), which fits about 16,000 patients per year, with trained paramedics as the primary patient contact. BMVSS also ships artificial feet, calipers, and other aids to thousands of patients worldwide — more than 50,000 in 2004. BMVSS does not charge for its prosthetics and service; it survives on donations from satisfied patients and from philanthropists.

Another example is the Aravind Eye Care system, the world’s largest provider of cataract surgery. This company, founded in 1976, performed 240,000 surgeries in 2004 and treated 1.6 million outpatients. The founder, Dr. G. Venkataswamy, has said that his goal is to “wipe out needless blindness.” Thus, Aravind treats more than 60 percent of its patients free — and continues to operate profitably.

All three health-care innovators, NH, BMVSS, and Aravind, have been around long enough to give us confidence that these innovative health-care efforts represent sustainable businesses.

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Destination moon: Indian Space Research Organisation’s lunar mission set for October launch

The image was copied from the English Wikipedi...

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Antrix, a division of ISRO, is a outsourced satellite launch provider with costs 30% cheaper compared to those of US and Russian providers. Outsourcing beyond IT! Wired magazine did a feature article on India’s space program a couple of years ago.

livemint.com

The Indian Space Research Organisation, or ISRO, plans to launch its lunar mission in October, marking the start of a two-year quest to learn more about the evolution of the moon and map its surface for minerals such as helium-3, or He-3.

Isro will launch Chandrayaan-1, the unmanned spacecraft, between 19 and 26 October, officials at the space agency said on Thursday.
The spacecraft, which weighs 590kg, will be fitted with 11 scientific instruments, including five from the US, Sweden, Japan, Germany and Bulgaria. These instruments and cameras would look for water on the moon, besides mapping the chemical, soil and mineral characteristics of its surface.
The Indian mission will also be the first to map the entire surface of the moon, including the polar regions where frozen water could be found, said T.K. Alex, director of Isro’s satellite centre in Bangalore, at a press conference.
Scientists estimate the moon has large reserves of He-3, a mineral used to produce nuclear energy that has the potential to solve the world’s energy problems.

Chandrayaan-1 will be fitted with an instrument provided by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, or NASA, of the US to map the lunar surface.
“The scientific knowledge gained by M3 will prove to be a valuable resource for Nasa’s future exploration of the moon,” Mary White, a member of the moon mineralogy mapper, or M3, team at Nasa’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said by email.

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Agro textiles in India to witness a surge in demand

Textile News – India :

Agro textiles are increasingly being used in agriculture, horticulture, forestry and fishing segments all over the world. These textiles are driving the sector profitability by improving the productivity and reducing the need of chemicals. In India agro textile is one of the significant segments of technical textile products occupying a significant place in terms of volume consumption. Internationally, the agro-textile market is expected to grow from 1615000 tonnes (US$6.5 billion) in 2005 to 1958000 tonnes (US$8.1 billion) in 2010, at an average growth rate of 3.9% per annum. Developing countries like China, Brazil and India with CAGR of 7.8%, are expected to witness a surge in demand for agro textiles.

Agro textiles prevent the soil from drying out thereby increasing the crop yield, and improving product quality. Such textiles protect the farmer from harmful pesticides. Agro textile products like shade netting and thermal screens enable a saving of 40% on energy used for heating greenhouses. Farmers have also found that use of agro textiles brings about improvement in the quality of fruit, uniformity of colour and prevent staining.

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Intel unveils first Made-in-India chip

The Economic Times

The world’s largest chipmaker, Intel, on Tuesday unveiled its latest microprocessor for servers, designed entirely by its Bangalore team and developed in a record two years. The Intel R&D centre in Bangalore designed the Xeon 7400 series processor and it marked the first time that work on the 45 nanometre technology was taken up by the company outside its US home base. The six-core microprocessor is based on Intel’s x86 architecture.

A 300-member team from Bangalore undertook the work with support from units in the US and Costa Rica, Intel India president Praveen Vishakantaiah said.

Intel’s Bangalore R&D operations, which started a decade ago, have grown to become one of the largest centres outside the US. Besides the six-core microprocessor, the India R&D team has made important contributions to the teraflop and quad-core Xeon processor.

Mr Vishakantaiah described it as a validation of the Bangalore operations and termed the country as a strategic destination as Intel India continues its focus on high-end technology development.

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India’s low-cost patient care earns plaudits in US study

During a visit to India last month, I accompanied my mother to Apollo hospital in Chennai for some minor plastic surgery. This was to stitch up a ruptured ear piercing. From seeing a doctor to getting the required surgery and coming home took about 1.5 hours and cost $125.  Incredible! I’ve spent more time and money on a restaurant meal. A nice touch was the morning devotional/moment of silence to wish for the speedy recovery of patients and well-being of their families.
Corporate News – livemint.com

A new study from Duke University says Indian hospitals’ innovative practices could offer valuable lessons to US policymakers and hospitals in providing low-cost and high-quality patient care.
In the study, titled “Lessons from India in Organizational Innovation”, published in the 10 September issue of Health Affairs, Duke University researchers say that while innovations are noticeable in areas such as customer service, labour practices and manufacturing in Indian hospitals, they all also reflect new organizational practices and market-oriented strategies.

Indian accomplishments thus offer lessons both on how to innovate and, more significantly, how to organize a marketplace that will foster valuable innovations,” he says.

Apollo Hospitals Group chairman Prathap C. Reddy is happy that Indian hospitals’ achievements are “finally ringing in people’s ears”. He says the achievements are a result of innovation in human efficiency, clinical care and quality management of large scale operations.

It is significant that an Indian example is being cited for the required US health care reforms as the two nations are stark opposites on this front. The size of India’s entire health sector is estimated at $20 billion (Rs90,240 crore), while the US health care sector is worth $2.3 trillion; at least 80% of the Indian health sector hinges on private resources, whereas state resources dominate the US sector, according to the study.

much of India’s success has come from its development, and constant improvement, of organizational structures.

This contrasts with the US health sector which, researchers say, “has been strikingly ossified” and has either excluded the new entrants or “crippled realistic challenges” posed by newcomers with innovative organizational forms.

The authors closely studied two hospital groups in India—Hyderabad-based Care Hospitals and New Delhi-based Fortis Hospitals. They found that the application of management practices from the hotel industry helps Fortis and others tailor care according to patients’ expectations, resulting in a more focused approach than that at many US hospitals.
Commercialization of local technology and “self-manufacturing” (hospitals making their own equipment)—which the authors of the study found interesting in Relisys Medical Devices Ltd, part of the Care group—is also practised at other places in India, including Aravind Eye Care System in Madurai, Tamil Nadu.

While skilled labour is indeed at the centre of innovations such as lowering the cardiac surgery cost from $100,000 in the US to $2,000-6,000 in India, hospitals here are beginning to innovate on the technological front, says Vishal Bali, chief executive of the Wockhardt group of hospitals.
Conscious, or awake, heart surgeries, pioneered at Wockhardt in Bangalore, are now being promoted at other group hospitals. Conscious heart surgeries reduce the length of stay in the intensive care unit as the patient is not on any life-support system. This, while lowering the cost of hospital stay, also expedites post-operative recovery and now constitutes 25-30% of Wockhardt’s heart surgeries, adds Bali.

Apollo’s Dr Reddy says India can innovate further in providing medical evidence to oriental systems of medicine and integrating it with traditional hospital care.

In India, hospitals are mostly run by doctors and they hire the administrators. In the US, the administrators hire the doctors,” says Dr Shetty. “I think in 10 years, Indian hospitals will manage the Western hospitals. The writing is on the wall.

It is a scenario which the authors of the study have already visualized. “The US health sector, however, may soon resemble other innovation-intensive industries in one important respect: it may find its industry leaders displaced by Indian offerings,” the study says.

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Vestas opens R&D centre in Chennai-India, its 2nd largest

The Hindu Business Line :

Vestas, a leading wind turbine manufacturer, inaugurated its research and development centre [in Chennai] on Wednesday, a centre that will be the second largest of its R&D centres in terms of number of engineers employed.

The Danish wind turbine manufacturer has technology centres in Denmark, the UK, Singapore and the US, with the Denmark centre being the largest.

“We are here in Chennai first and foremost because the talent pool is high. And, tapping into the best brains here is important for Vestas,”
said Mr Finn Strom Madsen, President, Vestas Technology R&D, who was here to inaugurate the centre.

The Chennai centre on the IT corridor, spread over 60,000 sq ft, has started with more than 100 employees, which number will go up to 500 engineers in the next four years.

Vestas’ Indian subsidiary is headquartered in Chennai along the IT corridor, close to where the R&D centre is located.

The Chennai centre will support the global engineering research and development activities, working all over the value chain. The engineers here will work on the most attractive projects in the value chain — mechanical, aerodynamics, material research and electronics.

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The uncomfortable future of competition

Business Standard

Globality – This book from three Boston Consulting Group (BCG) consultants suggests that the future of competition is far more complicated and unpredictable. Companies in the BRIC countries may certainly be emerging strong contenders to the hegemony of western multinationals, but they’re not the only ones. Whether it’s Mexico, Chile, Egypt, Hungary or Chile, potential world-beating corporations, their research shows that the spread of globalisation has meant that competition can emerge from pretty much anywhere. This is what the authors call “globality”.

“Globality is not a new and different term for globalization,” the authors write, “it’s the name for a new and different global reality in which we’ll be competing with everyone, from everywhere, for everything.”

These “challenger” corporations, as the authors call them, are in a wide variety of industries, from the conventional (steel, textiles, mining, telecom, consumer electronics) to the less common (pianos, baby strollers, cosmetics, paper packaging).

This kind of congruence between labour cost and innovation provides a unique challenge to western corporations because, unlike the earlier contract manufacturing operations that made millionaires out of local entrepreneurs, these challenger companies are building their own intellectual capital (as opposed to simply pinching it).

India and Brazil, for instance, are patently emerging as strong bases for value engineering. US household goods major Whirlpool developed an affordable washing machine for developing markets from its units in Brazil. This was not a stripped-down version of a US product but a machine designed from scratch with a smaller payload capacity and other specs suited to the developing country consumer. In doing so, Whirlpool ended up creating a market for low-payload washing machines.

The authors also write about the Logan, jointly produced by French car-maker Renault and Mahindra & Mahindra. Though the product has not yet moved the market significantly, the authors describe how Renault by teaming up with M&M was able to develop the model at 15 per cent less than the project cost. Indeed, M&M has already established its reputation as a value engineer having achieved this feat earlier with the Scorpio.

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Massive floating generators, or ‘eco-rigs’, to provide power and food to Japan

Gotta the love the long-term thinking Japanese
Times Online

Battered by soaring energy costs and aghast at dwindling fish stocks, Japanese scientists think they have found the answer: filling the seas with giant “eco-rigs” as powerful as nuclear power stations.

The project, which could result in village-sized platforms peppering the Japanese coastline within a decade, reflects a growing panic in the country over how it will meet its future resource needs.

The floating eco-rig generators which measure 1.2 miles by 0.5 miles (2km by 800m) are intended to harness the energy of the Sun and wind. They are each expected to produce about 300 megawatt hours of power.

Some energy would be lost moving the electricity back onshore, but when three units are strapped together, scientists at Kyushu University say, the effect will be the same as a standard nuclear power station.
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The eco-rigs’ gift to the environment does not stop there: some of the power that the solar cells and wind turbines produce will be hived off to fuel colossal underwater banks of light-emitting diodes (LEDs).

The lamps are intended to convert the platforms into nurseries for specially selected seaweed that absorbs carbon dioxide and feeds fish and plankton. Deep-sea water that is rich in minerals will enhance the seaweed growth. The wind turbines will power pumps that will then draw the water to the surface.The rigs will be unmanned and comprise several hexagonal platforms.

Strapped between them will be large nets designed to support the weight of wind turbines and about 200,000 hexagonal photovoltaic generators — super-efficient solar panels that are about the size of a double bed. The LEDs will shine down from the panels.

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Solar plants in deserts could yield water and crops

The Guardian

Vast greenhouses that use sea water for crop cultivation could be combined with solar power plants to provide food, fresh water and clean energy in deserts, under an ambitious proposal from a team of architects and engineers.

The Sahara Forest Project, which is already running demonstration plants in Tenerife, Oman and the United Arab Emirates, envisages huge greenhouses with concentrated solar power (CSP), a technology that uses mirrors to focus the sun’s rays, creating steam to drive turbines to generate electricity.

The installations would turn deserts into lush patches of vegetation, according to its designers, and do away with the need to dig wells for fresh water, an activity that has depleted aquifers across the world.

Charlie Paton, a member of the team, and the inventor of the Seawater Greenhouse, said the scheme was a proven way to transform arid environments. “Plants need light for growth but they don’t like heat beyond a certain point,” he said.

Above certain temperatures the amount of water lost through leaves’ stomata rises so much plants stop their photosynthesis and do not grow. The solar farm planned by the project runs seawater evaporators, pumping damp, cool air through the greenhouses. This reduces the warmth inside by about 15C, compared with the temperature outside.

At the other end of the greenhouse from the evaporators, water vapour is condensed. Some of this fresh water is used to water the crops, some for cleaning the solar mirrors.

“So we’ve got conditions in the greenhouse of high humidity and lower temperature,” said Paton. “The crops sitting in this slightly steamy, humid condition can grow fantastically well.”

The designers said that virtually any vegetables could be grown in the greenhouses. The demonstration plants already produce lettuces, peppers, cucumbers and tomatoes. The nutrients to grow the plants could come from local seaweed or be extracted from the seawater.

Michael Pawlyn, of Exploration Architecture, based in London, worked on the Eden Project for seven years and is now part of the Sahara Forest team. He said that the Seawater Greenhouse and CSP provided substantial synergies for each other. “Both technologies work extremely well in hot, dry, desert locations. CSP produces a lot of waste heat and we’d be able to use that to evaporate more seawater from the greenhouse. And CSP needs a supply of clean, de-mineralised water in order for the [electricity generating] turbines to function and to keep the mirrors at peak output. It just so happens the Seawater Greenhouse produces large quantities of this.”

Paton said the greenhouse produced more than five times the fresh water needed to water the plants inside, so some of the water could be released to the outside, creating a microclimate for hardier plants such as jatropha, a crop that can be turned into biofuel.

The cost of the Sahara Forest Project could be relatively low as both CSP and Seawater Greenhouses are proven technologies. The designers estimate that building 20 hectares (nearly 50 acres) of greenhouses combined with a 10MW CSP scheme would cost about €80m (£65m).

The International Energy Agency estimates that the world needs to
invest more than $45 trillion (£22.5 trillion) in new energy systems
over the next 30 years.

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‘Frugal engineering is India’s strength’

Business-The Times of India

In an interview to the TOI, the current poster boy of the global car industry, Renault’s CEO Carlos Ghosn and M&M’s charismatic managing director Anand Mahindra exuded an optimism that may well set the future for joint ventures in India’s fast growing automobile business.

And the no-nonsense, tough speaking Ghosn who has worked in the world’s three largest car markets__US, Europe and Japan was clearly in awe of Indian engineering. Why? Because they managed to shave 15% off the Logan’s production costs.

This is the kind of number that has Ghosn drooling. When the car was first thought up at Renault’s headquarters, it was meant to be a no-frills car that had to be built with as little resources as possible. Ghosn thought his company had done a pretty good job with it.

“But there is a thirst for learning here [in India] and that makes the Indian engineer innovate and create a product frugally. Engineers in other parts of the world always need more resources to do the same thing,” he said.

So is there a lesson in what he has seen for global automobile companies? “Yes,” says Ghosn. “They will have to show the humility to come into this country and learn. It isn’t possible to demonstrate such innovation when you work out of markets where resources are not at a premium,” he adds.

Suprised at lessons he’s learnt in India, Ghosn’s infatuation with frugality occupied most of the conversation. “Sure, capital costs are huge issue in this business. But we are discovering through our partnership with M&M that the level of investment for a specific objective can be done frugally.”

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